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Pharmaceutical Impacts of Cefixime, Ciprofloxacin, and Cobalamin on Normal Blood Using Histopathology: An In Vitro Study
M. Akhtar, F. Siddique, M. Jahanzaib, M. Fiaz, R. Mehmood, Muhammad Rizwan Sami and H. Ullah

Results of pathology along with camera-fitted digital microscopy is very vital to find the physiological and statistical impacts of analytes such as Cefixime, Ciprofloxacin, and Cobalamin for five concentrations (0 mM, 50 mM, 100 mM, 150 mM, and 200 mM). The Count of WBCs attenuates under Cobalamin with an attenuation factor of 4.1×103/μL, retards under Cefixime, and attenuates under Ciprofloxacin. RBCs count retardes from 3.48×106 to 3.20×106/μL. Increases under Cefixime and retarders under Ciprofloxacin. Platelet cells show attenuation of 11×103/μL and 4×103/ μL under Cobalamin and Ciprofloxacin respectively while show retardation of 15×103/μL. Compared to Cefixime, Cobalamin exhibits attenuation against WBCs and PLTs and retardation in RBCs and HGB. In contrast, Cefixime shows attenuation against WBCs and PLTs as well as retardation in RBCs, MCV, and HCT. The size of WBCs under Cefixime and Ciprofloxacin remains nearly constant, but under Cobalamin attenuates considerably. Cobalamin upsets WBCs significantly more at higher doses than Cefixime or Ciprofloxacin, which essentially have no effect on WBC size. Retardation or attenuation starts at 100mM. In comparison to Cefixime and Ciprofloxacin, Cobalamin exhibits a faster rate of fluctuation in blood components and indices, according to pathological data.

Keywords: Pyridoxine, cephalosporin, fluoroquinolone, pathology, field of view

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